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Super co-pilot Jeff Skiles is the kind of guy who will give you the shirt off his back – literally!

The selfless Skiles, the unheralded right-hand man of Flight 1549’s pilot as they safely crash-landed in the Hudson River on Thursday, didn’t just save the life of passenger Barry Leonard – he warmed him up with official US Airways threads.

After only 20 seconds in the frosty 36-degree water, Leonard knew he didn’t have it in him to swim to shore.

Instead, he headed for a nearby raft.

“I was obviously very cold, and one of the pilots turned to me and said, ‘Please take off your wet shirt, and I’ll give you my dry one,’ ” Leonard told ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

“He literally gave me the shirt off his back to keep me warmer. I still have it. And I’m never going to give it up. They are heroes.”

Leonard was laid up with a broken sternum at Palisades Medical Center in North Bergen, NJ.

Skiles, 49, is a 23-year veteran with US Airways and lives in Oregon, Wis., with his wife, Barbara, and their three children. He started flying private planes when he was a teenager, Barbara told The Post.

The humble pilot barely made an issue of the shirt in one of two phone conversations with his wife.

“He mentioned some fellow who didn’t seem to have a shirt on,” but that was all he said about the gracious act, according to his wife.

He told her that he scoured the plane for life vests after he noticed some people didn’t have them, she said. His legs went almost immediately numb in the frigid waters.